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August 23, 2000
His Excellency Askar Akayev
President of Kyrgyzstan
Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan
Via Fax: 011-7-3312-218627
Your Excellency:
The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) is alarmed by the harsh treatment
to which three journalists from the Bishkek independent weekly Delo
N were recently subjected by agents of the Ministry of National
Security. After a long and brutal interrogation on August 16, one of the
journalists was hospitalized with a heart condition, according to CPJ
sources.
On July 26 this year, Delo N published an article by Vadim Nochevkin
about the closed trial of former government minister Feliks Kulov, who
was charged with abuses of power while in office. Citing unnamed sources
inside the courtroom, Nochevkin reported the testimony of Boris Poluektov,
deputy chairman of the Ministry of National Security. This testimony allegedly
included classified information about one of the Ministry's undercover
agents.
After Kulov was acquitted on August 7, the Ministry opened a criminal
investigation against Nochevkin and Delo N for divulging state
secrets. (Local human rights advocates informed CPJ that this was a highly
improper action, since the Ministry is legally barred from investigating
cases involving its own interests.)
On August 16, Nochevkin was summoned to the Ministry for questioning,
along with Delo N editor-in-chief Viktor Zapolsky and deputy editor
Svetlana Krasilnikova. Authorities committed several serious procedural
violations in the course of the interrogation, local sources told CPJ.
For instance, the journalists were summoned to testify as witnesses in
the case in order to dodge the legal requirement that a defense lawyer
be present during the interrogation of a suspect.
Zapolsky and Nochevkin were interrogated for five hours each, while Krasilnikova
was questioned for over seven hours. During the interrogation, all three
journalists were pressured to reveal the sources for Nochevkin's article.
According to Kyrgyz legal experts, it is illegal both for journalists
to reveal confidential sources and for authorities to compel journalists
to do so.
All reported severe psychological coercion during the interrogation. Additionally,
Krasilnikova was deprived of food and water and was allowed only one short
break during the entire ordeal.
The next day, Krasilnikova, 49, was placed in the intensive care ward
at the National Hospital in Bishkek, suffering from high blood pressure
and heart problems. She claims her ailments were triggered by Captain
Melis Abdukalykov's aggressive interrogation; she was also deprived of
food and liquids, and there was little air circulation in the interrogation
room.
As a nonpartisan organization of journalists dedicated to defending the
rights of our colleagues around the world, CPJ protests the Ministry of
National Security's illegal investigation and inhuman treatment of Delo
N's staff. We urge Your Excellency to ensure that any legal proceedings
against Delo N and any other newspaper in Kyrgyzstan are carried
out with due process and in accordance with international standards for
a free press.
Thank you for your attention to this urgent matter. We await your reply.
Sincerely,

Ann K. Cooper
Executive Director
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